Thermal Imagery Data
Introduction
To acquire and prepare thermal aerial infrared imagery, we worked with NV5 Geospatial1 (formerly Watershed Sciences, Inc), a contractor who has led prior efforts in the region to gather thermal aerial infrared data for aquatic habitat research (Watershed Sciences 2010). On July 5, 2020, NV5 collected thermal infrared imagery from a helicopter-mounted camera for the four steams on the Kenai Peninsula lowlands that were the focus of this study (Beaver Creek, Funny River, Moose River, and Crooked Creek). All streams were flown during the afternoon hours in order to maximize the thermal contrast between the river’s water and the banks.
The surveys extend for a total length of 59.1 km of the streams. Flight transects proceeded from the mouth of each stream in an upstream direction. The data were collected to aid the team in identifying the spatial variability in surface temperatures as well as thermal influence of point sources, tributaries, and surface springs.
Specific deliverables generated by NV5 Geospatial from the thermal imagery data include:
Rasters (map image files; .tif and .jpg formats)
Shapefiles (longitudinal temperature profiles, stream centerlines, others; .shp format)
Other supplemental items (coordinates of significant thermal features, maps and figures, and others)
The full technical report from NV5 Geospatial describing detailed methods and interpretation can be downloaded at the following link in the online version of this report:
The image raster files are of a large size (~3 GB) and may be acquired by contacting staff at Cook Inletkeeper (sue@inletkeeper.org), Kenai Watershed Forum (hydrology@kenaiwatershed.org), or Kachemak Heritage Land Trust (info@kachemaklandtrust.org).
Parcel data summary
We generated a table in GIS (ArcMap Pro 10.8.1) of parcels in the Kenai Peninsula Borough that intersect with cold-water inputs (e.g. seeps, springs) within the surveyed areas of Beaver Creek, Crooked Creek, Moose River, and Funny River. We identified a total of n = 31 unique parcels containing a total of n = 63 unique cold water refugia features.
The figure below summarizes the ownership type of these parcels by general category of owner type.
Ground truth data
On July 7-8, 2021 we visited a subset of sites identified by the NV5 Geospatial Consultants report as cold water features. We visited 12 of 63 total sites. We recorded surface water temperatures of the identified features as well as the adjacent main stem using a using a Hach Sension 5 portable meter. The average time difference between main stem temperature observation and off-channel observation was 13.9 minutes. We created a graphic sketch of the layout of each feature, and recorded site photos.
Field forms, including site sketches, can be accessed at the following link: